The Walking Hills
The Walking Hills

The Walking Hills (1949)

6.0 ? Mar 05, 1949 1h 18m

Overview

A study in greed in which treasure hunters seek a shipment of gold buried in Death Valley.

Genres

Western

Release Date

March 05, 1949

Rating

6.0 /10

Runtime

1h 18m

Randolph Scott

Randolph Scott

Jim Carey

Ella Raines

Ella Raines

Chris Jackson

William Bishop

William Bishop

Dave "Shep" Wilson

Edgar Buchanan

Edgar Buchanan

Old Willy

Arthur Kennedy

Arthur Kennedy

Chalk

John Ireland

John Ireland

Frazee

Jerome Courtland

Jerome Courtland

Johnny

Russell Collins

Russell Collins

Bibbs

Josh White

Josh

Houseley Stevenson

Houseley Stevenson

Mr. King

Reed Howes

Reed Howes

Young King

Charles Stevens

Charles Stevens

Cleve

Ralph Dunn

Ralph Dunn

John McKee

John McKee

Frank Merlo

Jack Parker

Frank Yaconelli

Frank Yaconelli

John Chard avatar

John Chard

7.0/10

Sep 10, 2017

Like shovelling sand into the wind. The Walking Hills is directed by John Sturges and written by Alan LeMay. It stars Randolph Scott, Ella Raines, Arthur Kennedy, Edgar Buchanan, John Ireland, William Bishop, Josh White and Jerome Courtland. Music is by Arthur Morton and cinematography by Charles Lawton Jr. Upon hearing a chance statement about lost gold, a disparate group of people head out in search of it to the desert plains of The Walking Hills... Whipping up a sandstorm. A sort of contemporary Western film noir fusion, The Walking Hills is a darn fine drama that is acted accordingly. Though blessed with action, tension and passion, it's as a character study where the picture excels. True enough to say it's not overly complex stuff, the greed is bad motif a standard narrative strand, as is the tricky love triangle that resides within the sandy tale, but with the wily Sturges and the shrewd LeMay pulling the strings this plays out always as compelling. With the great Lawton Jr. adding his considerable skills as a photographer - ensuring the Alabama Hills and Death Valley locations are key characters themselves - the production shines. Often mentioned in reference to The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, it of course is not as good as that superb picture. That it earns its right to be considered a baby brother to it, though, is testament to its worth in itself. 7/10

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